Summary
Vectorcardiography, popularized in the 1950-ties,
became a new clinical method of three-dimentional recording and
representation of the spread of electrical activation in the heart and
of its electrical field. In this study, the experiments
were performed on the exposed hearts of anesthetized rabbits.
Vectorcardiographic recordings (“micro-vectorcardiograms”)
were obtained from the epicardial surface and from the depth of the
myocardium using specially constructed multi-point epicardial
electrodes (with rectangular or circular arrangement of the recording
points) and a three-dimentional intramyocardial electrode. Some
adaptation of the routine clinical recording equipment was needed
because of the high voltages recorded and low impedance of the
circuit. Obtained micro-vectorcardiograms allow easy determinations
and mapping of the directions of local spread of activation. Time of
its arrival locally could be determined by application of external
stimulus, synchronized with the spontaneous heart rhythm and with
increasing latency (fusion beats). Potential applications of the new
experimental technique are discussed in normal conditions and in
induced pathology. Incidental finding was a demonstration at the
myocardial level of the existence of T wave alternans during induced
myocardial ischemia.
Publication:
1.
Application of the Vectorcardiographic Method to
the Analysis of the Spread of Activation in Small Portions of the
Heart Muscle. Waldemar J. Wajszczuk. Proceedings of the
Symposium on Biomedical Engineering,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, June 23-25, 1966, vol. I, Cardiovscular
Physiology, XVII-3, pp. 373-377. |